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DeSantis Able to Tout Tax Breaks
Most of the nearly $1.3 billion in breaks for next fiscal year are slated to come from sales-tax cuts targeted at consumers. That includes providing tax exemptions on such things as diapers and other items from babies and toddlers.Receiving the Unthinkable: Attorney of the Year Finalist Takes on Surfside Collapse
Michael I. Goldberg, a partner at Akerman in Miami, is a finalist for the Florida Legal Award's Attorney of the Year.Covington and SEC Heading to Court Over Attorney-Client Privilege Battle
At a court hearing Wednesday, Judge Amit Mehta will hear arguments over whether Covington is required to turn over client names to the SEC.Restrictive Fair Hearing Decision on Medicaid Trust Vacated
A recent fair hearing decision denying a home care application, based on language in a trust that New York City Medicaid previously had routinely approved, has been vacated.View more book results for the query "Fish"
Vermont Law School Offers Scholarship for Indigenous People
"As a concrete first step in strengthening our relationship, we are pleased to announce that an annual scholarship supporting an Indigenous Vermont student's pursuit of a legal degree will now be available immediately," VLGS President Rod Smolla said in a statement.Florida Lawmakers Tee Up Tax Breaks for Shoppers, Businesses
The bill includes holding two back-to-school tax holidays, after holding one holiday in past years. It would allow shoppers to avoid paying sales taxes on clothes costing $100 or less, school supplies priced at $50 or less and personal computers that cost $1,500 or less.DeSantis Celebrates Wins at End of Busy Legislative Session
Gov. Ron DeSantis concluded a legislative session that establishes him as perhaps the most aggressive and accomplished conservative governor in the nation's bitter culture wars.Escalation of China-Taiwan Tensions Could Create Mayhem for Chip-Reliant U.S. Tech Firms
"Ultimately, the full social and economic impacts of a chip shortage of that scale are incalculable, but they would likely be catastrophic," according to a Rhodium Group report.Trending Stories
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